Yes, completely free foreclosure
listings do exist as long as you only want a fairly limited
amount of information about the property. Sometimes some
websites will give you a three or four month free trial and
then they will no longer let you look at the entire
contents of their listings. Most of these sites charge
something around nine ninety five and headed towards twenty
dollars a month in some situations after they get done with
the free trial period if they even offer one of those free
trials at all.
Many of these organizations that post
this information certainly won't let you look at more
detailed material such as photographs of the inside and
outside of the home. Of course the looks of everything on
the inside and outside can greatly help you in making a
decision as to whether to buy a home or not, so in most
cases in order to see those details you actually have to go
to an open house situation.
The open house situation is something
that can be either something you can really enjoy or it can
be a situation that you can grow to have a real disdain
for. In some situations it can just be people either
talking about how much the house needs to be fixed up
because of how bad it looks. People also tend to brag about
how much money they are willing to throw down in order to
buy this home when it comes up for auction. I don't know
sometimes who people are trying to impress, but if it makes
them feel better about their lives then they have every
right to speak up. The open house is usually how people try
and indirectly force you to stay for the auction, but
please realize that you have no obligation to stay for the
event even if you did see the listing for the foreclosed
property. If no one shows up for these auctions you may get
one of these homes for a real steal.